Vanessa C. Burbano (), Olle Folke (), Stephan Meier () and Johanna Rickne ()
Additional contact information
Vanessa C. Burbano: Columbia Business School
Olle Folke: Department of Political Science, Uppsala University, Postal: Box 514, 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden
Stephan Meier: Columbia Business School
Johanna Rickne: Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University, Postal: SOFI, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract: An understanding of differences in non-monetary work conditions is fundamental for a complete characterization of individuals’ well-being at work. Thus, to fully characterize gender inequalities in the labor market, scholars have begun to explore gender differences in non-monetary work conditions. We examine one such condition — meaningful work — using nationally representative survey data linked with worker and employer administrative data. We document a large and expanding gender gap in meaningful work, wherein women experience their jobs as more meaningful than men do. We then explore patterns underlying this difference. We find little correlation between women’s higher experience of meaningful work and either labor market decisions related to first parenthood or women’s under-representation in leadership jobs. Instead, the gender gap appears to be highly correlated with the sorting of more women into occupations with a high level of beneficence — the sense of having a prosocial impact. While both women and men experience such jobs as more meaningful, women do so by a larger margin. Next, we consider the relationship between the gender difference in meaningful work and the gender wage gap, contributing to the discussion on compensating differentials in work amenities. We find that while the gender gap in meaningful work closes a substantial part of the wage gap in lower-paid jobs, it does little to close the gap in higher-paid jobs where the gender wage gap is largest.
Keywords: meaningful work; non-monetary work conditions; occupational segregation; work conditions; gender
Language: English
63 pages, November 9, 2023
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